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    Home » Lighthouse Fibre: An Emerging ISP in Gauteng’s Broadband Space
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    Lighthouse Fibre: An Emerging ISP in Gauteng’s Broadband Space

    By Jocelyn FangSeptember 17, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    • Lighthouse Fibre (Pty) Ltd, is located in South Africa, and is registered as enterprise number K2016315745 since 21 July 2016. 
    • Broad industry challenges include high infrastructure cost, energy crisis (load-shedding), theft and vandalism of fibre, regulatory and spectrum allocation delays, and increasing overbuild in lucrative suburbs. 

    Lighthouse Fibre (Pty) Ltd: Profile and key facts

    Lighthouse Fibre (Pty) Ltd is a private ISP in South Africa. It was incorporated on 21 July 2016.  Its legal address is 36 Zenith Street, Solheim, Germiston, Gauteng. The organisation name is listed in PeeringDB and other registry services. 

    The South African broadband sector is growing. Demand for fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) and business broadband is strong especially in urban and suburban Gauteng. Fibre optic infrastructure is being laid in many areas. Competition is rising. Overbuild (when more than one fibre network is laid in the same area) is becoming common in lucrative suburbs. 

    There are energy challenges. Load-shedding by Eskom and unreliable power supply affect network reliability and operational costs. Infrastructure security is a concern. Theft of fibre cables, vandalism, and lack of protection of critical network assets affect many ISPs. 

    Regulatory factors are important. Licensing, spectrum allocation, classification of cables as critical infrastructure are under discussion. These affect how quickly and cost-effectively ISPs can roll out or expand networks. 

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    Challenges for Lighthouse Fibre (Pty) Ltd in this environment

    Lighthouse Fibre must deal with high cost of deploying fibre infrastructure (material, civil works, ducting, rights of way). They may face load-shedding that affects network equipment, especially if backup power is costly. They will probably be affected by theft or vandalism of fibre cables or network equipment.

    Regulatory uncertainties (licences, permits, definitions of critical infrastructure) may slow expansion or increase permitted costs. Overbuild in areas close to competitors may squeeze profit margins. Consumer affordability is also likely a limitation, as many customers are price sensitive.

    Innovations affecting Lighthouse Fibre (Pty) Ltd and peers

    Government and industry are pushing to classify fibre optic cables as critical infrastructure. That could bring stronger legal protection against theft or damage and reduce deployment risk. Fibre theft prevention, including security, surveillance, community engagement, public awareness, is increasingly part of strategy. 

    Network overbuild may lead ISPs to focus on secondary suburbs or less competitive areas to get better returns. Use of upstream peering, efficient IP management.

    Lighthouse Fibre South Africa
    Jocelyn Fang

    Jocelyn is a community engagement specialist at BTW Media, having studied investment Management at Bayes business school . Contact her at j.fang@btw.media.

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